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#229501 - 04/06/07 11:59 PM
Re: Consecration - when is done?
[Re: Philippe Gebara]
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Member
Registered: 07/16/03
Posts: 545
Loc: Tinley Park, IL
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Dear Philippe,
If I had to answer, I would say at the words of consecration, simply because Trent has said so.
But I'd much rather not answer. It's unseemly, I think, to worry about such things. It happens. To look for the moment where the magic happens is to reduce the liturgy to a magic trick.
Here's the problem: if there is a magic moment of "validity," then the importance of everything else becomes relativized. Do we need the exorcisms, the spitting, the breathing on or the tonsure for the newly baptized? After all, it has nothing to do with the validity of the sacrament!
To think that way is, in my opinion, terrible. Whatever happens in the sacrament happens, and there is no need to pinpoint a moment.
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#229536 - 04/07/07 03:48 PM
Re: Consecration - when is done?
[Re: Dr. Eric]
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Member
Registered: 07/16/03
Posts: 545
Loc: Tinley Park, IL
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All of this strikes me as like wondering what exact moment constitutes the consummation of a marriage.  Which isn't a bad image, since the Eucharist is the wedding feast of the Lamb. Athanasius the L, my thinking in this is shaped by Schmemann. I suppose, if absolutely pushed by some pressing need, I would say at the words of consecration, but I have a hard time figuring out what the need is to pinpoint the moment.
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#229826 - 04/10/07 07:04 PM
Re: Consecration - when is done?
[Re: Philippe Gebara]
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Member
Registered: 02/28/07
Posts: 175
Loc: San Diego, CA
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"We cannot know exactly WHEN this miracle takes place, only that after the Eucharistic Canon there is no more bread and wine on the altar but the Most Holy and Precious Body and Blood of OLGS Jesus Christ."
Father Meletius, as quoted above by Orthodox Catholic, is most certainly right. It seems to me that the key to understanding Fr. Meletius' view is to remember that the transubstantiation takes place outside time. The all-powerful, life-creating words of the Lord, the Anamnesis / offering, and the Epiclesis constitute a single, indivisible act, and each part contains the others.
This means that the typically Eastern teaching on the Epiclesis, and the typically Western teaching about the Verba Domini effecting the change (though Saint John Chrysostom also spoke in a similar manner), are both correct and mutually complimentary, both viewing the same Great Mystery from different angles.
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#229830 - 04/10/07 07:33 PM
Re: Consecration - when is done?
[Re: Gabriel]
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Member
Registered: 09/08/06
Posts: 507
Loc: Canada
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Christ is Risen! Xpuctoc Bockpec!
Gabriel I like your expression that the change "takes place outside time." Thanks for your post.
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#229944 - 04/11/07 06:23 PM
Re: Consecration - when is done?
[Re: Orthodox Catholic]
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Member
Registered: 02/28/07
Posts: 175
Loc: San Diego, CA
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I agree. According to the view I attempted to express, the Anamnesis and Epiclesis are already present when the Words of the Lord are spoken, but under normal circumstances (which would not be in the event of a bombing; God forbid!) they need to be proclaimed for the consecration. They are pronounced separately in time, but remain one indivisible act. Does this make sense to you?
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